80 Genius Beauty Tricks That'll Change Your Life
It's the biggest list of must-know tips — ever!
It's the biggest list of must-know tips — ever!
Use Green and Orange Concealer to Balance Out Undertones
It's all about complementary colors — or using total opposite shades. If you have a red pimple, use a green concealer tone down the redness. For example, moisturize your skin first and use a green and orange concealer palette to correct an uneven skin tone. Then apply foundation and concealer in your color all over in a patting motion. Finish with your typical makeup routine.
To see the full story on this technique, click here.
Apply Foundation at the "Center" of Your Face and Blend Out
If you apply a lot of foundation around your jawline or hairline, you'll look like you're wearing a mask. If you start at the center, the product will fade out around the edges for a more natural look.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Spritz Your Perfume in These Strategic Places to Make It Last All Day
When it comes to perfume, it's all about location—and we're not just talking about a spritz around the neck and on our clothes. But wait, your hair and behind your knees? Yeah — read all about whyhere.
Apply Bronzer in a "3" Shape for a Quick Contour
Don't apply bronzer all over your face — apply it in the shape of a three over your forehead, cheekbones, and jawline.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Use Translucent Powder to "Bake" Your Makeup
It's a six-step process: Hydrate your eye area, apply a thick concealer under your eyes, coat on more concealer, sprinkle on translucent powder, "bake" or "cook" your makeup, and dust it off. Boom, you're baked.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Zap Frizz With a Bonnet Dryer
A happy medium between the vintage and state-of-the-art salon hair dryers comes in the form of a bonnet-style attachment, like the one being used on Lady Gaga. It may look funny, but it produces the same, evenly-distributed heat. Plus, it's hands-free and portable. Perfect.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Work Those (Tri)angles
Draw a triangle shape under your eyes to brighten the entire eye area.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Contour With Just Blush
Like Pat McGrath says, working a pinky-peach shade into the browbones and temples "almost like a bronzer" warms up the complexion, thins out the face a bit, and suggests you've got the circulation of a red-capped Renaissance child.
Begin at the temples, curve up, and connect both sides in the middle of your forehead, keeping close to the edges as you continuously swirl and buff. (Check out this tutorial.) That outer shadow tricks the eye into reading it as a smaller space.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Master the Perfect Pimple Coverage
Layer foundation, concealer, and setting powder to ensure the blemish is completely covered and the product won't budge.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Fill Your Brows the Right Way
This can make you look like Groucho Marx's twin. The key to making your brows look darker but natural is not getting the formula you're using on your skin. If you have a bald spot you're trying to fill in, that's one thing, but if you're just trying to deepen your brow hair color, your best bet is a brow mascara that you can lightly swipe on for a more dramatic yet believable effect. Try L'Oréal Paris Brow Stylist Plumper Brow Gel Mascara.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Contour Below Your Cheekbones for a Diamond Face Shape
When it comes to highlighting, focus on the area under your eyes in an upside-down triangle shape and along your brow bone to brighten your eyes.Then do the middle of your forehead and the middle of your chin to help broaden these naturally narrow areas.
Learn more here.
Use Tiny Hair Strokes to Make Your Eyebrows Look Natural
Doing this too harshly can immediately make them look drawn on (a.k.a. fake). Instead, create shape by using tiny, hair-like strokes, regardless of whether you use a pencil, an angled brush topped with brow powder, or a brow mascara.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Contour the Sides of Your Forehead for a Heart Shape Face
Start along the sides of your forehead and temples to create balance between the wider upper half of your face and the more narrow lower half. Then work the area below your cheekbones beginning from your ears and ending in the middle of your cheeks and then the small area right below your chin to soften the point.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Layer Multiple Masks to Improve Your Skin
On the heels of clown contouring, and with masking hotter than ever, #multimasking is a perfect storm of the two. As the name suggests, it's essentially using different types of masks that are tailored to different parts of your face. The viral kicker? You do so all at once, and the results look like a cross between classic contouring and tribal war paint.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Use a Spoolie Brush to Blend Out the Product
This is one of the most important steps to creating natural-looking arches. An easy way to fill in your brows — which also gives your brow that sharp yet still soft beginning — is by drawing a line (at an angle) under your eyebrow at its start with a brow pencil, and then using a spoolie brush to diffuse it up into your brow. However, you have to remember to blend it entirely or else it will be noticeable.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Use Clear Mattifier for an Oily Complexion
Don't use loose powder to fight an oily complexion. Too much powder can make your makeup look cakey. Instead, use a clear mattifier. Apply it before or after your makeup, and watch the shine disappear.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Follow the Natural Shape of Your Brow
Unshaped brows don't frame your face as well as well-groomed brows could. Don't have time to see a brow expert? Simply follow the shape of your brow (where the most hair is) and tweeze any strays that fall outside of that shape for perfect arches.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Clown Contour for a Flawless Finish
YouTuber BellaDeLune has developed on a new way to "extreme color-correct, highlight, and contour" known as "clown contouring." In her video tutorial called "Clown Color Correct Highlight & Contour," the guru (her real name is Esther Isabel Amado Romo) shows how dramatic clown-style makeup can be blended into a flawless face. By strategically placing color correctors, brighteners, and dark contours (and yes, even a "little poop emoji"), Romo achieves a beautiful final look.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Set Your Blush
Follow our lead:
1. Moisturize first
2. Use primer
3. Apply liquid foundation underneath
4. Layer your formulas
5. Finish your look with setting spray
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
Use Your Finger to Do a 10-Second Smokey Eye
1 ... 2 ... 3 ... and you're done!
1. Quickly sweep eyeliner along your top and bottom lash lines. Don't be precise—the messier you are, the better.
2. Use your ring finger to smudge the liner up and out along your lid and lower lash line.
3. Follow with two thick coats of mascara: One applied with the wand held horizontally, as you usually would, and another with the wand held vertically.
To see a full article on this technique, click here.
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